There was some talk at Sunday’s protest of re-repainting the lanes, removal of which had spurred the now-famous guerrilla repainting, arrests, etc. But it was raining, so they couldn’t. “You can’t really paint in the rain,” organizer Monica Hunker told the BP. Nonetheless, “I think we’re all prepared to get arrested,” Hunker said, but despite the presence of over a dozen cops, no one was.

Not everyone is sympathetic to the cyclists. As we noted, the whole episode is widely seen as a hipster-related incident, which attracts disapprobation. There are even prominent anti-biker commentators out there, like NYU Professor Tunku Varadarajan who, while admitting of the local Hasidim, who complain of underdressed female bikers, that their “standards of primness can be rather exacting,” finds that “cyclists do pursue a form of zealotry of their own. They have quasi-religious garments (Day-Glo jackets), they follow austere codes of discipline (exercise and low fat),” and other offenses to Varadarajan’s sensibilities. Also, he asks, “Who in New York City, whether a pedestrian or a dismounter from a car, taxi, or bus, has not been imperiled by a cyclist?” And he refers to the Williamsburg lot as “‘trustafarian’ poseurs,” etc. So: Not a fan, then.

Transportation Alternatives’ Wiley Norvell doesn’t want to comment on the protests, but says that while the issue is “thorny” — as are all bike lane issues in Williamsburg — his organization is pro-lane. “The decision to remove the lane is one we disagree with,” he says. “Given that Bedford Avenue will have a large or growing amount of cycle traffic, it’s in everyone’s best interest to keep it.”

But TransAlt “hasn’t decided on the best course of action” to address the issue legally, Norvell says. In the meantime, he tells us, concerned riders may contact TransAlt to get in on the “commuter pools” they’re forming for morning rush hours, “so cyclists, instead of riding one at a time, can bike with two or three other people,” he says, “to ensure safety in numbers, and that you’re more visible.”